"Scarcity" as Political StrategyReflections on Three Hanging Children

There are two striking features of "scarcity" -- not enough food or water or land and so on -- within modern economic theory: one, its failure to explain what it claims to explain; and two, its enduring appeal despite this failure. Hunger, for example, is rarely caused by an absolute scarcity (no food at all) but socially-generated ones -- not enough food in some places for some people because of various mechanisms that give more power to some people to deny food to others.

But even if it is (reluctantly) acknowledged that yesterday's or today's famines and resource crises are not caused by too many people but by a range of political conflicts, the claim that there will not be enough food, water, land, housing or clean air in future because of future population growth still seems plausible.

Despite this power of scarcity and population to colonise the future, resources crises are likely to be rooted in the same dynamics as they are today: political conflict, sexism, racism, human rights abuses, and environmentally destructive practices. To prepare for future resource crises, it would be more sensisble to address the present than to look to a theoretical model of the future.